Nineteen eighty-four

I recently read George Orwell’s Nineteen eighty-four. I don’t think I’ve read this cornerstone of dystopian fiction since 1984. The thing I’m struck by now, twenty-eight years later, is how much of an influence it’s had on me. Two of the three screenplays I’ve written are dystopian in nature. Carrion is set in a society on the cusp of exceeding to totalitarian regime. The Singularity is essentially a vision of Orwell’s room 101; I can’t think of anything worse than being tapped on a spaceship with hoards of zombies. I have another idea, something that’s been on the back-burner for a while now, that deals explicitly with surveillance. The story is still unformed but inhabits a world where surveillance is used as a substitute for morality. I don’t have much more than that notion and a few nebulous images, some of which were used in my short screenplay Phos/phate. The thing that all these projects share with Nineteen eighty-four is an interests in the technologies of power. It’s a subject I come back to again and again. And comes I think from a feeling, rightly or wrongly, that I am being controlled in some way. I want to understand power. How it works? And how to survive it? I’m not sure if anyone else views the world like this but I often have the feeling that when the rulebook of existence was handed out I wasn’t given a copy. Or it could just be that I’m just far too sceptical, too much of a heretic.